What cases did the US Supreme Court decide at the end of its 2024 term?

A number of landmark decisions, all of which the US Supreme Court has rendered, cover everything from school reading lists to healthcare coverage.

Before taking a few months of recess, the court made its final decisions for the 2024 term on Friday. In October, the nine justices on the bench will convene again.

The justices, however, made headlines before they left. The six-person conservative majority decided to limit the ability of courts to impose universal injunctions that would block executive actions nationwide, a significant victory for the president’s administration.

Trump has consistently attacked his executive branch’s use of court injunctions.

The conservative majority on the Supreme Court banded together again in two other decisions. In one decision, parents were able to opt out of LGBTQ-themed educational materials, while the other gave Texas the go-ahead to place restrictions on young people’s access to online porn.

However, some conservative justices sided with their three left-wing colleagues when they made the decision regarding healthcare access. Their final decisions for the 2024 term are presented in this summary.

The court upholds the rules for preventive care.

The Supreme Court’s usual ideological divides were broken up in Kennedy v. Braidwood Management, which was a result of this case.

Sonia Sotomayor, Ketanji Brown Jackson, and Elena Kagan joined the court’s liberal branch, which includes three conservative justices: Amy Coney Barrett, Brett Kavanaugh, and John Roberts.

A government task force’s ability to determine what types of preventive healthcare were required by the nation’s insurance providers.

The Affordable Care Act, a piece of legislation passed under former President Barack Obama to expand access to healthcare, was the most recent case to challenge its constitutionality.

A section of the act that allowed a panel of health experts under the Department of Health and Human Services to determine what preventive services should be covered for no cost was the subject of this case.

However, a group of people and Christian-owned businesses had objected to the task force’s legality.

They claimed that the expert panel was in violation of the Constitution’s Appointments Clause, which mandates that the president choose and approve certain political appointees.

Prior to the task force’s decision, the group had successfully prevailed in favor of the group’s request that all HIV prevention medications be classified as preventive care.

The Supreme Court’s decision did not consider that particular injunction. Justice Kavanaugh, speaking for the majority, argued that the task force was legitimate because it consisted of “inferior officers” and didn’t require Senate approval.

Texas’s age restrictions on pornography are rejected by the court.

In an effort to protect minors from offensive content, several states, including Texas, require users to verify their ages before accessing pornographic websites.

Free Speech Coalition v. Ken Paxton was the subject of the Supreme Court’s scrutiny of Texas’ law on Friday, according to the case.

The Free Speech Coalition is a non-profit organization that works for adults’ entertainment. The attorney general of Texas, Paxton, was sued by the group for contending that the age-verification law would impair First Amendment protections, which include the right to free expression, free association, and privacy.

The plaintiffs noted the dangers associated with sharing personally identifying information online, including the possibility of leaking sensitive data like birthdates. For instance, the American Civil Liberties Union warned that Texas’s law “robs people of anonymity.”

Justice Clarence Thomas acknowledged in a letter to the conservative majority on the Supreme Court that “submitting to age verification is a burden on the exercise” of First Amendment rights.

However, he added that “adults have no First Amendment right to completely disregard age verification.” The majority of the time upheld Texas’s law.

The court grants children the right to reject LGBTQ educational material.

With the ruling in Mahmoud v. Taylor, the Supreme Court’s conservative supermajority continued its long history of victories for religious freedom.

The Montgomery County Board of Education in Maryland, where books with LGBTQ themes had been approved for use in primary school textbooks, was the subject of the case.

A picture book called Love, Violet, for instance, told the tale of a young girl who mustering the courage to give a Valentine’s Day to a female classmate. Another book, Pride Puppy, follows a young girl looking for her missing dog in a parade to honor LGBTQ pride.

Parents of the school district’s students criticized the content on religious grounds, and some books, like Pride Puppy, were eventually dropped.

However, the board eventually made the announcement that it would block parents from withdrawing from the approved material because it would disrupt the learning environment.

Some education officials claimed that the inclusion of LGBTQ people in mainstream culture would impose a stigma on those who identify as LGBTQ and that this was simply a fact of life.

Justice Samuel Alito claimed in the majority’s decision that the education board’s policy “conveys that parents’ religious views are not welcome in the “fully inclusive environment” that the Board claims to foster.”

According to Alito, “the curriculum itself also betrays an attempt to impose ideological conformity with particular views on sexuality and gender.”

The use of nationwide injunctions is restricted by the court.

The Supreme Court’s conservative supermajority, it seems, decided another decision, which was probably the biggest of the day.

The Trump administration had appealed the use of nationwide injunctions all the way to the country’s highest court in the case Trump v. CASA.

Trump’s executive order, which he signed on the first day of his second term, was in danger. The Fourteenth Amendment of the US Constitution sought to simplify the concept of birthright citizenship.

Almost everyone who was born on US soil would be granted citizenship regardless of their parents’ nationality in the past.

Trump has, however, criticized the overuse of birthright citizenship. He placed restrictions on the birthright of a person based on their parents’ immigration status in his executive order.

As soon as the executive order was made public, legal arguments erupted against the decision to support birthright citizenship regardless of the parent’s nationality. Federal courts in states like Maryland and Washington quickly enacted injunctions to stop the executive order from being effective.

The Supreme Court did not consider whether Trump’s decree regarding birthright citizenship was valid on Friday. However, it did evaluate a petition from the Trump administration, contending that the judicial system had overreacted.

Trump backed off of the conservative supermajority, saying that specific plaintiffs’ needs should be the focus of any injunctions. However, class action lawsuits might be one of the possible exceptions.

The majority’s decision was written by Amy Coney Barrett, the court’s most recent addition and Trump appointee.

Foreign aid cuts hurt the most vulnerable in world’s largest refugee camp

Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh –  One of the dozens of refugee camps, a densely populated coastal town in southeast Bangladesh, echoes through the lush lanes of one of the dozens of refugee camps.

Just for a moment, the sounds manage to soften the harsh living conditions faced by the more than one million people who live here in the world’s largest refugee camp.

Eight years after being ethnically cleansed from their homes in neighboring Myanmar by a predominately Buddhist military regime, the Rohingya Muslim refugees in Bangladesh are now one of the most forgotten populations in the world.

During a visit to the squat camps in May, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres remarked, “Cox’s Bazar is ground zero for the impact of budget cuts on people in desperate need.”

The UN chief’s visit followed United States President Donald Trump’s gutting of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), which has stalled several key projects in the camps, and the United Kingdom announcing cuts to foreign aid in order to increase defence spending.

As a result of the severe blows to foreign aid, the camps’ healthcare has suffered.

They refer to me as “langhra” (lame).

Seated outside his makeshift bamboo hut, Jahid Alam told Al Jazeera how, before being forced to become a refugee, he had worked as a farmer and also fished for a living in the Napura region of his native Myanmar. He first noticed his leg swelling up suddenly in 2016 at the time.

I was farming when I suddenly felt the intense itch in my left leg, Alam said. “My leg soon turned red and began swelling up. I attempted to ice it up as soon as I could. But it was ineffective.

A local doctor prescribed an ointment, but the itch continued, and so did the swelling.

Soon after, he became dependent on his family, finding it challenging to stand or walk, and unable to work.

He made the decision to send his family to Bangladesh a year later when Myanmar’s military began torturing and burning Rohingya homes in his village.

Alam stayed behind to look after the cows on his land. But the military immediately threatened to take him out of Bangladesh and join his family there.

Since arriving in Cox’s Bazar, the 53-year-old has been receiving treatment from Doctors Without Borders, known by its French names MSF, in the Kutupalong region, but it seems likely that his leg has been amputated. While some doctors have said he has Elephantiasis – an infection that causes enlargement and swelling of limbs – a final diagnosis is yet to be made.

Alam is also dealing with stigma as well because of his disability.

When they discover that I can’t walk properly, he said, “they call me langhra.”

But, he adds: &nbsp, “If God has given me this disease and disability, he also gave me the opportunity to come to this camp and try to recover. I’m optimistic that my life will start over.

[Valeria Mongelli/Al Jazeera] Jahid Alam at the Cox’s Bazar refugee camp in Bangladesh

‘ The word “Amma” gives me hope ‘

Jahena Begum, who is seated in a dimly lit room in a small hut about ten minutes’ walk from Alam’s shelter, hopes aid organizations will continue to help the camps, particularly those who have disabilities.

Sumaiya Akter, 23, and her sons Harez, 19, and Ayas, 21, are blind and have a cognitive disorder that prevents them from speaking clearly. They are largely unaware of their surroundings.

As they aged into teenagers, Begum claims, “their vision gradually began to fade.”

The mother, a mother, patted her daughter’s leg, and it was very difficult to watch.

The young girl giggled, unaware of what was going on around her.

After the military in Myanmar burned their home down, Begum’s family moved to Cox’s Bazar about nine months ago.

“We managed to get to the camps with the family’s assistance. But life has been very hard for me”, said Begum, telling how she had single-handedly brought up her children since her husband’s death eight years ago.

She and her children have begun receiving eye exams and having scans to find out the cause of their disability.

They currently express everything through sound, the statement read. But the one word they speak, which is ‘ Amma’, meaning mother, shows me that they at least recognise me”, Begum said.

“The word “Amma” gives me hope and strength to try to treat them.” My children’s future should be better than mine.

Cox's Bazar
Jahena Begum, first left, with her three children, Sumaiya Akter, second from left, Ayas, third from left, and Harez, right, during an interview in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, earlier this month]Valeria Mongelli/Al Jazeera]

The pain is emotional, not just physical, according to the statement.

Anowar Shah described fleeing Myanmar to save his life, along with losing a limb to a mine explosion, wearing a blue and pink striped collared shirt and a striped brown longyi, the cloth worn by both men and women there.

Shah said he was collecting firewood in his hometown Labada Prian Chey in Myanmar&nbsp, when his leg was blown off by the landmine last year.

According to a 2024 UN report, Myanmar is one of the most deadly nations for landmine and non-exploded explosives casualties, with more than 1, 000 victims recorded in 2023 alone, surpassing all other countries.

The 25-year-old Shah, who now uses crutches to move around, described those as “the longest, most agonizing days of my life.”

“Losing my leg shattered everything. I changed from providing and protecting to one who relies on others to get by on the job. He said, “I can’t even do simple tasks alone; I can’t move freely, I can’t work, and I can’t even do simple things.”

“I feel like I’ve become a burden to the people I love. The pain is deep and emotional, not just physical. Why did this happen to me, I keep asking myself.

Cox's Bazar
Anowar Shah is a victim of a landmine explosion in Myanmar and lives in a refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh]Courtesy of Anowar Shah]

More than 30 refugees in Bangladesh’s camps have been left disabled and dependent on other people after losing limbs to landmine explosions.

According to John Quinley, director of the rights organization Fortify Rights, all parties to the armed conflict in Myanmar have engaged in some form of landmine use.

“We know the Myanmar junta has used landmines over many years to bolster their bases. He added, “They also place them in rural areas where they have occupied and fled,” he said.

Abdul Hashim, 25, described how being struck by a landmine in Cox’s Bazar in February 2024 “drastically altered his life.”

“I have become dependent on others for even the simplest daily tasks. I once felt like a burden because I no longer contributed to my family,” he said.

Hashim has participated in a rehabilitation program at the Turkish Field Hospital, which includes balance exercises, stump care, and hygiene education. Since arriving in the camp, he has been receiving medication and physical therapy.

He has also been assessed for a prosthetic limb which currently costs about 50, 000 Bangladeshi Taka ($412). The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade of Australia suports the cost of these limbs.

“I still have some hope despite the trauma and hardship.” I dream of receiving a prosthetic leg soon, which would allow me to regain some independence and find work to support my family”, Hashim said.

The aid organization Humanity & Inclusion, who are experts in producing the prosthetic limbs in orthotic workshops outside the refugee camps, has distributed and fitted to camp residents a total of 14 prosthetic limbs.

As part of the organization’s rehabilitation program, which provides gait training to help them adapt to the use of prosthetic limbs regularly, both Hashim and Shah participate.

Tough decisions for aid workers

Aid workers are currently faced with difficult decisions as a result of cuts to foreign aid, making sure refugees in the camps are well-supported and can lead better lives after fleeing persecution.

A Bangladeshi healthcare worker who requested anonymity reportedly said, “We are having to choose between feeding people and providing education and healthcare due to aid cuts,” citing fear that his statement might affect US aid going forward. &nbsp,

Quinley of Fortify Rights argued that while aid funding is severely limited, the response to Rohingya refugees should be a shared responsibility across the region.

He claimed that “there needs to be a regional response,” particularly for those in Southeast Asia, to provide funding.

“Countries connected to the OIC (Organisation of Islamic Cooperation) in the Middle East could also give a lot more meaningful support”, he said.

He also suggested working with local humanitarian organizations, “whether it’s the Rohingya refugee groups themselves or the Bangladeshi nationals,” because they are the best at assisting their local communities.

He argued that governments around the world should support them because they are at the forefront of their ability to reach people who need support.

For the estimated one million refugees in Cox’s Bazar, urgent support is needed at this time, when funds grow ever scarce.

Only 30% of the total $852.4 million needed by the refugees was received, according to a Joint Response Plan created for the Rohingya in 2024.

Only 15% of the refugees’ funding was received as of May 2025, against an overall request for $934.5 million.

Cutting the aid budgets for the camps is a “short-sighted policy”, said Blandine Bouniol, deputy director of advocacy at Humanity &amp, Inclusion humanitarian group.

According to Bouniol, it will “devastate people” in the long run.

Cox's Bazar
[Valeria Mongelli/Al Jazeera] A Rohingya refugee camp has a wall that is topped with barbed wire.

Chelsea vs Benfica: FIFA Club World Cup – teams, start, lineups

Who: Chelsea vs. Benfica
What: FIFA Club World Cup round of 16
Where: Bank of America Stadium, Charlotte, North Carolina, United States
When: Saturday, June 28 at 4pm (21:00 GMT)

How to follow: From 1pm local time (18:00 GMT) until our live text commentary stream, we’ll have all the news coverage on Al Jazeera Sport.

Chelsea and Benfica square off in the second round of 16 tie at the FIFA Club World Cup, which is arguably a match straight out of the UEFA Champions League.

The clubs have won nine titles between them, with Benfica, the Portuguese giant, winning seven of Europe’s top club competition.

Following their recent group stage blunders, Al Jazeera Sport anticipates the game, which will cause the English club a significant headache.

What irritates Chelsea ahead of the Benfica tie?

After finishing second in their group, Chelsea are dealing with logistical problems at the World Cup, making it necessary to travel to Charlotte for their final 16 game instead of staying in Miami, where the organization anticipated to be based for the knockout stages.

According to a source, the West Londoners were presuming they would win Group D and play their round-of-16 game at Hard Rock Stadium when making travel arrangements, lodging, and training.

View of the 11 host cities for the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup (Al Jazeera).

The club still intends to return to its Miami base after the game, which will add more miles to an already hectic schedule because of the detour to Charlotte.

Chelsea’s fate in the group stage

Los Angeles’ 2-0 victory gave The Blue a 2-0 start to their Club World Cup campaign. Chelsea finished second in the group stage after falling to Brazil’s Flamengo 3-1, but they did so 3-0 over Esperance Tunis in Philadelphia in their final game.

FIFA Club World Cup - Group D - Esperance de Tunis v Chelsea - Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. - June 24, 2025 Chelsea's Tyrique George scores their third goal
Tyrique George scores the third goal for Chelsea in the group game against Tunis [Lee Smith/Reuters].

What was Benfica’s performance in the group stage?

Boca Juniors’ opening match of the FIFA Club World Cup ended Benfica 2-2 with. The Lisbon-based club then defeated Germany’s Bayern Munich 1-0 and New Zealand’s Auckland City 6-0 in their final two games.

In the quarter-finals, who will play Chelsea or Benfica?

The winner of Saturday’s tie will face Palmeiras and Botafogo, who is the only team from Brazil, at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia.

Chelsea hasn’t won a club world cup before.

Yes . Chelsea has won the Club World Cup once, twice lifting the trophy from the UEFA Champions League twice in Europe.

With a 2-1 victory over Palmeiras from Brazil, the Blues won the title in 2021.

The Blues scored the opener with Romelu Lukaku and Kai Havertz scoring the winner in extra time.

What last time did Chelsea and Benfica meet?

The Blues won the UEFA Europa League game with a 2-1 victory over the Blues in the competition.

Oscar Cardozo scored from the spot in the 69th minute to give the Blues the lead at the hour mark.

With a Chelsea winner in the 90th minute, Branislav Ivanovic put an end to the conflict.

Chelsea v SL Benfica - 2013 UEFA Europa League Final - Amsterdam ArenA, Amsterdam, Holland - 12/13 - 15/5/13 Chelsea's Fernando Torres celebrates with the trophy
Following Chelsea’s 2013 victory over Benfica, Fernando Torres celebrates with the UEFA Europa League trophy.

news from the Chelsea team

Wesley Fofana has returned to the team for the tournament, but the defender is still recovering from a long-term thigh injury and will miss the game once more.

In the match against Flamengo, striker Nicolas Jackson receives the second and final game of a two-game suspension for a straight red card.

Reece James, Levi Colwill, and Marc Cucurella are all expected to make an appearance.

News from the Benfica team

Florentino Luis is expected to make a comeback after missing the previous two games due to a shoulder injury, but Alexander Bah and Manu Silva have been a long time players.

Andrea Belotti’s suspension is lifted.

Possible starting lineup for Benfica:

Trubin, Aursnes, Silva, Otamendi, Carreras, Barreiro, Sanches, Di Maria, Prestianni, Schjelderup, Pavlidis, and others

Chelsea’s potential starting lineup:

Sanchez, James, Tosin, Colwill, Cucurella, Caicedo, Fernandez, Neto, Palmer, Madueke, Delap,

Head-to-head

Chelsea has won each of the three meetings between the two teams, with Chelsea taking home the win.

The Blues also won both Champions League matches in 2011 and 2012 in addition to their success in the Europa League against Benfica.

Form manuals

Benfica performance (in all competitions):

D-L-D-W-W

(All competitions): Chelsea form

W-W-W-L-W

Mitchell wants ‘no regrets’ from England at World Cup

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England will approach this summer’s home World Cup with “no regrets” says Red Roses head coach John Mitchell.

England’s women have been in their Rugby World Cup training camp since the start of June as they aim to win the trophy for the first time in 11 years on home soil.

Having faced two tournament final defeats at the hands of New Zealand in 2017 and 2022, Mitchell is not shying away from the challenge ahead.

“How do we get done what we haven’t had for a long time?” the 61-year-old said. “We mustn’t have been doing something right.

“I guess that’s the powerful opportunity while this tournament is under our watch, it’s an opportunity to have no regrets.”

So far, England’s pre-season has seen the players put into teams to compete in “strong women” challenges, but New Zealander Mitchell has also introduced an “NBA draft system”.

Players asked to double up

The group is currently made up of 42 players that Mitchell will have to reduce to 32 for the World Cup with him choosing 18 forwards and 14 backs.

The limitations on numbers mean that Mitchell is looking for “versatility” in his players with Exeter wing Claudia McDonald once again being looked to cover scrum-half like she did in 2022.

Gloucester wing Mia Venner is also being looked at in three positions, adding both nine and full-back to her repertoire which she has covered at club level.

Getting tough in Treviso

The last Red Roses camp before the Rugby World Cup squad is named will be in Treviso, Italy in July.

It is the first foreign camp England’s women have been taken on, but despite the excitement the head coach is promising it will be one the toughest and hottest they have experienced.

“The heat will in itself create its own duress” said Mitchell, with temperatures in the region averaging around 30C in the summer.

“I think our tournament might be hot, so I think we’ll benefit from that. It will probably be our most uncomfortable training camp of all of them because it will be hot and you’ll get bothered.”

After England lost the last Rugby World Cup final after an early red card for wing Lydia Thompson, the coaches are keen to ensure no stone will be left unturned to prepare the side for all eventualities.

“The amount that we’ve layered on our game will put them under a lot of questions through scenarios,” said Mitchell. “The unfairness that comes in the games through the cards, those sorts of things. The play-to-rest ratios will be probably a little bit lower as well. We can create a really quite niggly camp if you like.

“We want to be ready for any form of unfairness and it will come at some point. Look at the way cards and HIA’s (Head Injury Assessments) have advanced the game in that area.

“We’ve definitely got to do it because it’s going to come in the tournament. I’d rather be ready for every eventuality and even then, we probably won’t be ready for every eventuality.

Rivals

As England prepare, so do their rivals and Mitchell is putting plans in place for warm-up games with Spain and France, followed by their opening pool games with USA and Samoa.

After a scare against France in their final Six Nations match in May when Les Bleus came back to within a point by the final whistle, Mitchell says they have learned from it.

“The French match has been a big influence on how we learn and evolve our game,” he said. “We look at that separately from the other matches, because they’re able to threaten us in different ways.”

He pinpoints the change in defence coach in the last campaign with Sarah Hunter being off on maternity leave and Nathan Catt taking on her duties as contributing to them losing “a little bit of our system” and since her return “we’re obviously definitely refreshing that and bringing that back”.

However, any talk deeper into the tournament is quickly shut-down.

He will not be drawn on commenting on either Canada or world champions New Zealand.

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Olivia Rodrigo surprises fans with Ed Sheeran at BST gig ahead of Glastonbury show

Fans of Olivia Rodrigo had a special experience when she welcomed a surprise guest to her Hyde Park, London, concert at British Summer Time.

Olivia Rodrigo stunned her fans(Image: Millie Turner/Invision/AP)

Olivia Rodrigo’s fans were left stunned by the songstress’ surprise guest at her BST gig in Hyde Park. The show came before her hugely anticipated Glastonbury Festival appearance, where she will close this year’s epic event.

And while her fans were left in awe with a brilliant performance of some of her biggest hits and catchy tunes, it was her special guest that got fans feeling gobsmacked. On a sunny day in London, the Drivers License singer welcomed Ed Sheeran to the stage.

The 22-year-old American brought ginger-haired Ed to the stage for a rendition of his early hit, The A Team, while wearing a black sequinned leotard for the show. From the side of the stage, he had been watching Olivia wow the audience.

Olivia Rodrigo performs on stage at British Summer Time Hyde Park,
Olivia Rodrigo performs on stage at British Summer Time Hyde Park(Image: Millie Turner/Invision/AP)

But Olivia surprised attendees at the end of the show when she described him as “one of the greatest songwriters of all time” as he patiently waited. The Azizam singer has performed at other people’s shows before, far from the norm.

He has previously surprised fans at concerts of Limp Bizkit, Stormzy and Taylor Swift to name a few. And taking to Instagram following his latest surprise, he said: “Been a fan of Olivia’s since Drivers License blew my mind back at the start of 2021. Both albums are no skips for me. I’m a proper fan.”

Continue reading the article.

He continued, “Was going to watch the show anyway, but she approached me and requested that she sing The A Team with her,” which generated such a buzz.

To be playing it to new fans with one of the brightest stars of the next generation is an honor and privilege since that song turns 15 this year, and I can recall playing it to rooms with no one in it in 2010…

Rock Glasto headlines Sunday at oliviaarodrigo’s, “UK loves you x,” he signed off.

Ed Sheeran and Olivia Rodrigo
Ed Sheeran and Olivia Rodrigo(Image: Getty Images for The Rock and Ro)

Olivia’s Glastonbury appearance is rumoured to have come from organisers’ hopes to appeal to younger audiences. It’s said to be hoped that Olivia and the 1975 – fronted by Matty Healy – will appeal to a younger audience.

Everyone is pleased with this year’s lineup, according to a source who spoke to the Daily Mail prior to the announcement. Some people were concerned that this year’s festival would be characterized as the year of the wrinkly rockers at one point because Neil Young and Rod Stewart were already well-known.

Continue reading the article.

The 1975 and Olivia Rodrigo are both well-known and have appealed to younger audiences, so the hope is that Glastonbury will appeal to both young people and those who might want to see Neil or Rod.

Although Lewis Capaldi’s surprise return to the stage was the show’s mainstay on Friday, The 1975 won the show.

EastEnders star shares heartbreak in emotional post after death of his beloved brother

Sean Maguire, who is best known for his role on the BBC soap EastEnders, claims he was forced to pull over because he was crying so much.

He has been struggling since his brother’s death (Image: PA)

An EastEnders actor and pop star has shared his heartbreak after losing his beloved brother.

Sean Maguire who first rose to fame in Grange Hill and went on to star as Aidan Brosnan in EastEnders in 1993 before launching a successful pop career, revealed he was going through a ‘tough time’ recently.

The 49-year-old, who now lives in LA, shared his profound sorrow over the loss of his dear brother as he responded to a recent Instagram post from Scottish singer Lewis Capaldi. He shared how he had broken into tears when hearing one of Lewis’ songs.

READ MORE: Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom ‘SPLIT’ after nine-year relationship

Sean Maguire, the star of EastEnders, has revealed his heartache.
Sean Maguire, the star of EastEnders, has revealed his heartache.

Sean said, “Lewis has been a fan for a while. I dislike discussing this s****. But right now I’m having a difficult time. I lost my brother six months ago. Keeping things together. However, I dropped my kids off this morning and played “a loved one” differently. then wept in disbelief.

Continue reading the article.

I was unaware that I needed it. I might have done it. had to pull the car over so I could continue to cry and sing. I appreciate your therapy. Thank you so much. You assisted me in recovering. X”.

Sean’s brother, who passed away on January 11, shared the depressing news on his own social media account on January 15. I’ve had a hard time coming up with the words or even choosing the images for this, he said in a video. Because it implies that it is true, but our dear brother, Darren Maguire, passed away on January 11th, for those who are unaware.

Without prior authorization, content cannot be displayed.

“He passed away peacefully by his family. He was a truly remarkable man, friend, brother, and father. Everyone who knew him adored him so much. I’m still shocked to the core.

“I can barely form a sentence, but I know the world has lost one of its most beloved people and I have lost my best friend. We love you Darren and we’ll never stop loving you. Now go make them laugh and dance heaven.”

Sean played troubled teen Aidan Brosnan on Albert Square during his year there. Sean’s character, who was 17 when Sean first started writing for the soap, was involved in difficult storylines about drug and homelessness, which led to a near-suicide attempt in 1993. He blamed his girlfriend Mandy for ruining his life, but she prevented him from killing himself. He fled to Ireland.

Continue reading the article.

Sean rose to fame after leaving EastEnders, recording eight top-three singles, including Good Day, which reached the top 12 in the UK. Sean is a proud father of three with his former wife Tanya Flynn, despite having a successful career both on and off the screen.